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Falstaff (Special Edition)
(edizione speciale)
| Tutte le versioni DVD | Edizione | Dischi |
Prezzo Amazon
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Nuovo a partire da | Usato da |
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DVD
10 luglio 2015
"Ti preghiamo di riprovare"
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— |
1
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11,41 € | 26,99 € |
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DVD
30 agosto 2016
"Ti preghiamo di riprovare"
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Special Edition
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2
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29,50 € | 43,04 € |
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DVD
2 novembre 2018
"Ti preghiamo di riprovare"
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Standard Version
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1
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—
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80,73 € | — |
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DVD
28 febbraio 2011
"Ti preghiamo di riprovare"
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— |
1
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190,66 € | 31,06 € |
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Dettagli prodotto
- Aspect Ratio : 16:9, 1.85:1
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- Lingua : Italiano, Inglese
- Dimensioni del collo : 18.03 x 13.76 x 1.48 cm; 83.16 grammi
- Regista : Orson Welles
- Formato supporto : DVD, PAL, Schermo panoramico
- Tempo di esecuzione : 1 ora e 53 minuti
- Data d'uscita : 7 marzo 2013
- Attori : Walter Chiari, Fernando Rey, Orson Welles, Jeanne Moreau, John Gielgud
- Sottotitoli: : Italiano
- Lingua : Italiano (Dolby Digital 2.0), Inglese (Dolby Digital 2.0), Non disponibile (Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono), Sconosciuto (Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono)
- Studio : CG ENTERTAINMENT SRL
- Garanzia e recesso: Se vuoi restituire un prodotto entro 30 giorni dal ricevimento perché hai cambiato idea, consulta la nostra pagina d'aiuto sul Diritto di Recesso. Se hai ricevuto un prodotto difettoso o danneggiato consulta la nostra pagina d'aiuto sulla Garanzia Legale. Per informazioni specifiche sugli acquisti effettuati su Marketplace consulta la nostra pagina d'aiuto su Resi e rimborsi per articoli Marketplace.
- ASIN : B004CQH3RQ
- Numero di dischi : 1
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Posizione nella classifica Bestseller di Amazon:
n. 23,640 in Film e TV (Visualizza i Top 100 nella categoria Film e TV)
- n. 6,511 in Drammatici
- Recensioni dei clienti:
Descrizione prodotto
Descrizione
Enrico IV, primo monarca dei Lancaster, regna in Inghilterra. Alla sua morte gli succede con il nome di Enrico V, il principe Hal, che salito al trono, esilia il suo vecchio compagno di avventure e sregolatezze John Falstaff. L'ultimo grande film di Welles che interpreta Falstaff come una vittima. E' sicuramente il personaggio, tra i tanti che impersonò, che più gli assomiglia. E' un'altra storia di sconfitta che narra l'intrccio tra il destino dei perdenti e le ragioni della storia, il disfattismo delle guerre e la fatalità del caso. Nonostante gli scarsi mezzi a sua disposizione, Welles realizza un'opera monumentale, una rappresentazione visionaria del ricco lessico shakespeariano entrata di diritto nella storia del miglior cinema di sempre
Sinossi
Enrico IV, primo monarca dei Lancaster, regna in Inghilterra, quando muore gli succede, con il nome di Enrico V, il principe Hal che rinnega Falstaff, il suo vecchio compagno di crapule e sregolatezze e lo esilia.
Recensioni clienti
Recensioni migliori da Italia
Al momento, si è verificato un problema durante il filtraggio delle recensioni. Riprova più tardi.
e fa suo il personaggio e ,come attore,gli rende pienamente gistizia!
Avrebbe potuto gigineggiare,il personaggio porta a uscire dalle righe,ma se ne gusrda bene!per quanto possibile la recitazione e'composta,variegata,intensa
Sente il personaggio e gki costrusce intorno uno splendido film,facendo un favore al Bardo che si era dimenticato di dedicare a Falstaff un'opera tutta per lui.
Ripara Orson,in stato di grazia
CAPOLAVORO INDISCUTIBILE
p.e.s
Interpreti di rango. Raccomando a chi non si accontenta di filmetti
HO NOTATO CHE NON SPECIFICATE SE C'E' LA TRADUZIONE IN ALTRE LINGUE.
Molto soddisfatto !
Le recensioni migliori da altri paesi
Being an Orson Welles film, it was made in Spain, with an unlikely eclectic cast from various countries, makes eloquent use of the means available to him, but displays a remarkably close fidelity to both the letter and spirit of the Shakespeare plays Welles has mined for the golden experience this film offers.
I have never seen a more rounded (pun intended) Falstaff as that of Welles. When he played Rochester in the forties Jane Eyre for example, we only saw one or two aspects of the man, but in Falstaff - particularly as Welles was by 1965 fifty and fat, to put it bluntly - he almost literally becomes the bragging, bibulous, lovable old fraud. His restraint in the heart-wrenching scene of newly-crowned Hal`s dismissal of him - "I know thee not, old man" - speaks volumes.
John Gielgud gives one of his best ever screen performances as Henry IV, a chilly, austere king and father, as unsentimental as he is racked with shame and guilt and concern for the succession. Of course, Gielgud speaks the lines faultlessly, but he seems to be in perfect accord with Welles`s direction and perception of the part. If Welles is the blustering heart of the film, Gielgud`s Henry is the shivering soul.
The sets are wonderful, again the low budget forcing Welles to create magic out of a bare castle or a straw-filled inn-cum-bawdy-house in some Hispanic version of Eastcheap!
That sadly neglected Welsh actor Keith Baxter (still with us at eighty) is brilliant as Hal, both in the tavern scenes and as King Henry V - by the end, you can see him adopting the piety and seriousness of the man we know from history. It is a committed and utterly natural performance. (One minor cavil is that his, and Tony Beckley/Poins`s hair styles look too contemporary.)
The glorious Margaret Rutherford is perhaps a trifle motherly as Mistress Quickly, though her final sublime prose speech recounting Falstaff`s death - one of the most moving passages in Shakespeare - is on the button.
Jeanne Moreau (what a cast!) is superb as a fiery Doll Tearsheet, and Norman Rodway a fine, suitably impetuous Hotspur.
A word too for the late Michael Aldridge (credited wrongly as Aldrich) as Pistol. He was a wonderfully funny and resourceful actor, and he invests his smallish role with an unforgettable vigour and a kind of debauched charm.
That respected, too little seen actor Alan Webb, in his scenes with Falstaff, is a model Justice Shallow, all high voice and endless chatter.
Every now and then you wonder if the whole thing is going to fall apart at the seams, such is the obvious on-the-hoof manner of the film`s production, but this feeling only adds to its overwhelming, and ultimately touching sense of rightness.
The lengthy battle scenes are astonishingly and realistically achieved, and the cinemaphotography of Edmund Richard is a thing of wonder.
There are more `perfect` films from Shakespeare, but none so exciting to look at - no, not even Kurosawa`s Ran - or so moving. The words are audible (at least they are in this new print) and spoken by all both naturally and with full attention to meaning.
This was Welles`s own favourite among his films, and one can easily see why.
Unmissable.
At the center is prince Hal, whose father disapproves of his adolescent partying. He needs the corpulent Falstaff, who loves him and hopes to use him once he gains power, as a courtier. Gielgud (the perpetual old man) is the King, defending himself and Hal from a series of deadly challengers from family and friends. All of these relationships evolve, so close to life that only Shakespeare could write it. It make me weep at the mystery of life.
The film is extremely ambitious, a hallmark of Welles. The sets are wonderfully realistic, including the horrific civil war battle between the Henries, when Henry IV must at last prove his mettle to his father. Nothing romantic and glorious, just mud, mayhem, and fear. It is one of the best portrayals of organized violence on film. But there is the wider milieu as well, from the court to brothels and pubs. It is beautiful and raw.
I saw this 30 years ago in English with subtitles on French television and remembered it so vividly that I have looked for a good version of it ever since. This version is good, but the sound is primitive and somewhat low. The formatting is also inset rather than full screen, hence the print somewhat inferior. But these are minor gripes. This is a great film that can be viewed over and over. Now I will watch it with my children, for whom I am nurturing an interest in SHakespeare - this is the perfect vehicle.
Warmly recommended.
Tobias Churton
I previously purchased a Korean DVD with Korean Subtitles - it worked, because it gave me the chance to see it, but it was very unclear.
This is Mr. Bongo's version and it rocks - still not HD but it is soooo much better. It is the best copy out there.
If you love Shakespeare and the language of his plays, add to that Orson Welles' skillful direction, you will not be disappointed.
No Subtitles or Special Features.




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